This whole matchup is a massive albatross, and fans calling it “useless” is being kind. It is the absolute peak of sanctioning body absurdity, and boxing fans see right through it.

Pulling Michael Eifert out of relative obscurity and forcing him as a mandatory challenger after he has sat on the shelf for ages is pathetic.

Eifert looks like he was dropped onto the planet and got handed a pair of gloves. He has zero promotional footprint, no real momentum, and is completely out of his depth against an elite operator. It is a completely unmarketable mismatch that does nothing for the 175-pound landscape, serving only as a mandatory obligation that freezes up the division.

It is a textbook no-win situation where the upside is completely non-existent, and the downside is absolute disaster.

If Bivol goes out there and takes Eifert apart inside a couple of rounds, nobody is going to give him a shred of credit. The fans and critics will just shrug and say he did exactly what he was supposed to do against a totally unproven mandatory challenger who looked out of place. It does absolutely nothing to elevate his status or build on what he accomplished in the past.

The real danger is if Bivol looks human. If he shows any signs of ring rust after his 15-month layoff, gets touched up, or even has to struggle a bit to clear this hurdle, his stock will drop like a stone. In boxing, the court of public opinion is brutal. If an elite fighter doesn’t completely obliterate someone perceived as a random mandatory, the narrative immediately shifts to “he’s slipping” or “the layoff ruined him.”

He is risking his entire standing just to keep a belt from a sanctioning body that forced a fight nobody asked to see.

The Russian champion has not fought since defeating Artur Beterbiev in their rematch in February 2025. That victory avenged the lone defeat of Bivol’s professional career after Beterbiev had edged him by majority decision four months earlier.

Bivol enters the contest with a record of 24-1 with 12 knockouts. Eifert, 13-1 with five knockouts, secured his title opportunity by defeating former world champion Jean Pascal in an IBF eliminator in 2023. The German contender has fought only once since that win while waiting for his shot at a world title.

Saturday’s bout will be sanctioned by the IBF. The WBO will not sanction the fight because Eifert is not ranked within its top 15 contenders.

The card takes place in Ekaterinburg, with Bivol returning to action after more than a year away from the ring and Eifert receiving the first world title opportunity of his career.

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